Review Article Open Access November 01, 2022

An Analysis of the South African History of the Culture of Teaching and Learning

1
Faculty of Commerce and Law, Eduvos, Johannesburg, South Africa
2
Department of Information and Communication Technology, National Electronic Media Institute of South Africa, Johannesburg, South Africa
3
Mpumalanga Department of Education, South Africa
4
Mpumalanga Department of Education, Siboniwe Primary School, Kwa-Mhlanga, South Africa
Page(s): 289-300
Received
September 22, 2022
Revised
October 22, 2022
Accepted
October 30, 2022
Published
November 01, 2022
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright: Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Scientific Publications
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APA Style
Mdhlalose, D. , Fakude, Z. , & Ramaphakela, J. (2022). An Analysis of the South African History of the Culture of Teaching and Learning. Current Research in Public Health, 2(6), 289-300. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojer.2022.499
ACS Style
Mdhlalose, D. ; Fakude, Z. ; Ramaphakela, J. An Analysis of the South African History of the Culture of Teaching and Learning. Current Research in Public Health 2022 2(6), 289-300. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojer.2022.499
Chicago/Turabian Style
Mdhlalose, Dickson, Zandile Fakude, and John Ramaphakela. 2022. "An Analysis of the South African History of the Culture of Teaching and Learning". Current Research in Public Health 2, no. 6: 289-300. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojer.2022.499
AMA Style
Mdhlalose D, Fakude Z, Ramaphakela J. An Analysis of the South African History of the Culture of Teaching and Learning. Current Research in Public Health. 2022; 2(6):289-300. https://doi.org/10.31586/ojer.2022.499
@Article{crph499,
AUTHOR = {Mdhlalose, Dickson and Fakude, Zandile and Ramaphakela, John},
TITLE = {An Analysis of the South African History of the Culture of Teaching and Learning},
JOURNAL = {Current Research in Public Health},
VOLUME = {2},
YEAR = {2022},
NUMBER = {6},
PAGES = {289-300},
URL = {https://www.scipublications.com/journal/index.php/OJER/article/view/499},
ISSN = {2831-5162},
DOI = {10.31586/ojer.2022.499},
ABSTRACT = {Purpose: The aim of this study is to the analysis of the South African history of the culture of teaching and learning. This study was driven by the desire for effective teaching and learning within the South African context. Design / Method / Approach: The information in this research came from outside sources (secondary sources). Journal articles (after peer review), dissertations (both published and unpublished), internet sources, and textbooks were used as informational resources. Findings: Teachers believe they have no say in the development of the educational system but are expected to execute its policies and procedures. Fear of change can lead to inappropriate behaviour. For a country to have globally competent citizens it needs to review its curriculum. South Africa has undergone a substantial educational change since the mid-1990s, but its efforts to implement new curricula have been problematic. After the dawn of democracy, concerns were raised about the decline of a positive culture of teaching and learning, especially in disadvantaged township schools. Theoretical implications: there is a lack of theory on an analysis of the South African history of the culture of teaching and learning. Thus, this study seeks to expand the theory. Practical implications: Findings from this research will advance the science behind the culture of teaching and learning in South Africa. Originality / Value: This research will shed light on the development of South Africa's teaching and learning culture, provide suggestions gleaned from its findings, and point the way toward other avenues of inquiry. Research Limitation & Implications: This research was constrained by the quantity and quality of published secondary sources at the time of writing.},
}
%0 Journal Article
%A Mdhlalose, Dickson
%A Fakude, Zandile
%A Ramaphakela, John
%D 2022
%J Current Research in Public Health

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%N 6
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%M doi:10.31586/ojer.2022.499
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AB  - Purpose: The aim of this study is to the analysis of the South African history of the culture of teaching and learning. This study was driven by the desire for effective teaching and learning within the South African context. Design / Method / Approach: The information in this research came from outside sources (secondary sources). Journal articles (after peer review), dissertations (both published and unpublished), internet sources, and textbooks were used as informational resources. Findings: Teachers believe they have no say in the development of the educational system but are expected to execute its policies and procedures. Fear of change can lead to inappropriate behaviour. For a country to have globally competent citizens it needs to review its curriculum. South Africa has undergone a substantial educational change since the mid-1990s, but its efforts to implement new curricula have been problematic. After the dawn of democracy, concerns were raised about the decline of a positive culture of teaching and learning, especially in disadvantaged township schools. Theoretical implications: there is a lack of theory on an analysis of the South African history of the culture of teaching and learning. Thus, this study seeks to expand the theory. Practical implications: Findings from this research will advance the science behind the culture of teaching and learning in South Africa. Originality / Value: This research will shed light on the development of South Africa's teaching and learning culture, provide suggestions gleaned from its findings, and point the way toward other avenues of inquiry. Research Limitation & Implications: This research was constrained by the quantity and quality of published secondary sources at the time of writing.
DO  - An Analysis of the South African History of the Culture of Teaching and Learning
TI  - 10.31586/ojer.2022.499
ER  -